Google's machine translation is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.

Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.

The Givati was reestablished as a mechanized infantry brigade and then proceeded on to amphibious warfare in 1983. In 1986 the brigade's purple beret was officially approved.[2] Since 1999 it serves under Israel's Southern Command.

The Givati Brigade served under the Southern Command and was deployed in the Gaza Strip. The Brigade was awarded a medal of honor for its service in the Gaza Strip during the last two years of the Al-Aqsa Intifada, when under the command of Imad Fares. Under Fares' command, the Givati Brigade carried out thousands of operations in the Gaza Strip.

On May 11 and May 12, 2004, two armored personnel carriers of Givati's Dolev engineering battalion were destroyed by Palestinian militants. The two separate attacks, in Gaza City's Zeitoun neighbourhood and the Philadelphi Route near Rafah and the Egyptian border, claimed the lives of 11 soldiers. Islamic Jihad militants captured some of the remains, causing outrage in Israel.[3] Following international pressure and further Israeli operations in Zeitoun, the bodies of soldiers were returned to Israel.

In the Zeitoun incident, UNRWA ambulances were used as transport by healthy Palestinian fighters.[4] In an interview with Haaretz, Israel's Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz also said that UNRWA's ambulances were used by Palestinian militants in order to smuggle some of the remains of IDF soldiers killed in Zaitoun neighbourhood in Gaza on May 11, 2004.[5] UNRWA has described the May 11 incident as a hijacking.[citation needed]

The brigade's Shaked battalion, under the command of a Lt. Col. "Ofer" (surname not publicized) was rocked by scandals in the second half of 2004 while stationed in the southern Gaza Strip. Two of the battalion's four company commanders were removed, although one was later exonerated. Captain "R", a Druze officer was tried for killing Iman al-Hams, a 13-year-old Palestinian girl, in Rafah in October 2004.[6] Captain "R" was acquitted of all charges by a military court.[7] Another officer, Captain "N", was removed after Palestinian gunmen infiltrated the Morag settlement and killed three soldiers.[8] in September 2004.

On September 12, the Givati Brigade left the Gaza Strip as part of Israel's unilateral disengagement plan, one month after the evacuation of approximately 8,000 Jewish settlers living in 22 communities in the Strip. It marked an end to the 38 year IDF presence in the Gaza Strip. Today, two battalions are stationed outside the Strip, while the third battalion is positioned on the northern border.

On June 27, in response to Hamas' kidnapping of Corporal Gilad Shalit, the IDF started an offensive in the Gaza Strip to repel the continuous rockets being fired into the Israeli town outside of Gaza and to pressure Hamas to release Shalit. Givati, together with the Golani Brigade, Engineering Corps and the Armored Corps, participated in Operation "Summer Rains."[9][10] However, Israel failed to achieve the release of Shalit, and a November 26 ceasefire agreement between Israel and the Palestinian groups forced Israel to withdraw its forces.

Captain "R", the former Misayat Shaked company commander who was accused in "confirming kill" of 13-year-old Iman al-Hams in Rafah in October 2004, and was acquitted in court, received NIS 80,000 in compensation from the state, according to a December 14 Ha'aretz report.[7]

The Givati was the first brigade to receive the new IMI Tavor TAR-21 assault rifle, in August 2006.

They also participated in the ground phase of Operation Cast Lead in Gaza (ended in 2009). Of the IDF brigades, the Givati penetrated the deepest into Gaza City. The brigade's reconnaissance battalion entered the Tel el-Hawa neighborhood in search of Hamas operatives two days before the cease fire went into effect. An estimated 40 Palestinian gunmen were killed as dozens of apartments were swept. Hamas reportedly decided to fire the commander of the Gaza City Brigade after its forces fought against the Givati.[11]

In summer 2012, the Givati Brigade participated in Operation Protective Edge. During a US-brokered humanitarian ceasefire, ((2014) קרב רפיח) elements of the brigade's reconnaissance company were attacked by Hamas fighters in the southern Gazan city of Rafah, near the border with Egypt. Three soldiers, including the company commander of the Givati Reconnaissance Company (Sayeret Givati), were killed in the ensuing firefight. The squad of Hamas fighters dragged an injured lieutenant's body into a tunnel, and the assistant company commander took a small group of soldiers with him into the tunnel in an attempt to rescue the injured lieutenant. The IDF Rabbinate later declared the lieutenant deceased for the purposes of Jewish burial and grieving rituals, and Hamas has up to the present claimed to be in custody of the lieutenant's body. The assistant company commander was later awarded Israel's highest military honor, and the soldiers that accompanied him into the tunnel were also awarded military commendations. The Givati Brigade was the most highly decorated brigade in the IDF in 2014, partially as a result of action seen during the summer 2014 conflict.